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The KILM – part of the broader ILO statistical database ILOSTAT – is a multi-functional research tool produced by the ILO Department of Statistics . The KILM consists of country-level data on 17 key indicators of the labour market from 1980 to the latest available year.

UNAIDS was mandated by the UN General Assembly to monitor progress on global AIDS response in the 2001 UN General Assembly Special Session on HIV and AIDS, and reaffirmed this mandate in the 2011 High Level Meeting. The Global AIDS Response Progress Reporting data consists of 30 core indicators, divided by 10 global targets, which are reported by participating countries on their national response to HIV and AIDS. The GARPR indicators (before 2012 known as UNGASS indicators) were until 2012 reported at the global level every second year. However, from 2013, data have been collected every year to enable effective monitoring of progress towards the Millennium Development Goals of 2015. Collected data are published as part of the Global Report on AIDS. In 2014, 177 out of 193 UN member states (186 in 2012) submitted their reports.

With the establishment of the Knowledge Sharing Center composed by the Department of Research and the Department of Statistics, compiling all the microdata sets held by many units throughout the Office has been identified as a core part of our statistical strategy, in order to build a common repository of microdata to be widely used by all officials to carry out their research and analysis activities.

The ILO Global Database on Occupational Safety and Health Legislation (LEGOSH) provides a picture of the regulatory framework of the main elements of OSH legislation, including OSH management and administration, employers’ duties and obligations, workers’ rights and duties, OSH inspection and enforcement, among others. LEGOSH classification structure is based on a comprehensive set of 11 themes which follows and captures the main part of the key ILO standards such as the ILO Convention No.155 on Occupational Safety and Health (1981) and the Recommendation N°164, Convention No.187 on the Promotional framework for occupational safety and health (2006), the Labour Inspection Convention C081 and other technical Conventions as benchmarks.

The website aims to bridge education and training to the world of work by sharing approaches, knowledge and effective practices that international organizations, policy makers, employer and worker organizations, the private sector, and others have found effective in promoting skills development. This site benefits from collaboration with the OECD, UNESCO and the World Bank.

The YouthPOL eAnalysis, is the ILO’s global database on youth employment policies. Through this platform, you will be able to access data on currently enforced policies affecting youth employment across the world. The database is a product supported by multiple partners and ILO offices and units. More details are available on the YouthPOL homepage.

Sectoral Country Profiles provide a succinct snapshot of the multidimensional and sectoral nature of decent work at the country-specific level by highlighting key indicators that describe the sector’s significance in the country’s labour market, as well as their overall contribution to economic growth and job creation.

The ILO Development Cooperation Dashboard provides views of ILO’s Extra-budgetary Technical Cooperation (XBTC) projects and Regular Budget Supplementary Account (RBSA) programmes. It is an online portal providing both financial and documentary information that users can access at any time in a comprehensive and secure manner. It shows the general allocation of ILO project funds and project activities since 2005, the earliest project information available when the Integrated Resource Information System (IRIS) was first implemented in the ILO. RBSA programmes were introduced in the 2008-2009 biennium, so RBSA information is only available from that date. The information is organized by geographical location (region, subregion and country), strategic outcome, donor (development partner) and project.

YEI is the first comprehensive database to provide comparative information on youth employment interventions worldwide. Comprising more than 400 youth employment programs from around 90 countries, YEI documents program design, implementation, and achieved results. The programs included range from interventions for improving the labor market information base (counseling, job search skills) to programs that aim at increasing the demand for youth labor (wage subsidies and public works) and those focusing on improving chances for young entrepreneurs (providing financial, technical, and training assistance).
The YEI will make a substantial contribution to better impact evaluation of youth employment interventions and strengthen the basis for evidence-based project planning, management and monitoring. This will be achieved through expanding the database and gathering more detailed information on the evaluation of the included interventions.

Database of national labour legislation covering termination of employment; registration, status and recognition of trade unions and employers' organizations; equality of opportunity and non-discrimination in employment; and on occupational safety and health and the working environment for the 13 ILO member States of the English- and Dutch-speaking Caribbean, maintained by the ILO's Subregional Office for the Caribbean.

The Docu Track provides access to all project evaluation reports, including internal and independent reports, all high-level evaluations such as the strategy and thematic evaluations, decent work country programme reviews and all other training and guidance material held in EVAL

The IPEC Programme Database provides a comprehensive point of entry to IPECs programme and project information on child labour. It includes project-specific management reports, such as project documents and progress reports, as well as research oriented documents and outputs.

NATLEX - database of national labour, social security and related human rights legislation
Records in NATLEX provide abstracts of legislation and relevant citation information, and they are indexed by keywords and by subject classifications. The database contain over 88,000 records covering 196 countries and 160 territories and subdivisions. Records appear in only one of the three ILO official languages (English/French/Spansih)

"The Understanding Children’s Work (UCW) project is an inter-agency research cooperation initiative involving the ILO, UNICEF and the World Bank, and
it is guided by the Roadmap adopted at The Hague Global Child Labour Conference 2010.
UCW research extends to a variety of policy issues associated with child labour, including education, youth employment and migration. "

The ILOAIDS Database offers a user interface in the three official ILO languages. The database contains a comprehensive collection (in PDF format) of relevant national legislation, national and sectoral workplace and other policies on HIV and AIDS, jurisprudence (availble in PDF in the original language of the decision), collections of good practices and relevant publications. The main web page also profiles relevant news and offers links to multimedia, events and meetings relevant to HIV andAIDS in the world of work and in the public and private sectors.

The ILO Working Conditions Laws Database provides a picture of the regulatory environment of working time, miniumum wages and maternity protection in more than 100 countries aroudn the world. It contains comprehensive legal information, which allows you to conduct customized research on a specific country, to compare the legislation of several countries or regions on a particular subject or to perform searches by text.

SIMPOC provides access to a comprehensive compendium of child labour statistics and methodological guidance material. Processed child labour data can be accessed in the form of national child labour survey reports, statistical country-briefs and other resources derived from household-based SIMPOC surveys. A large number of micro-datasets are also available.

This Resource Database contains more than 200 tools and resources that directly or indirectly focus on poverty from a macro-level perspective and/or from a local development perspective within the ILO's decent work framework.
The majority of these resources, which range from policy papers and studies to manuals and guidelines, have been published over the past five years by the ILO. Each entry contains information about the resource, including decent work dimensions, relevance to local development processes, certain substance issues, users, and beneficiaries, as well as a brief summary of the contents. In most cases the resources can be accessed electronically, in PDF format. However, where it is not available electronically, links are provided to the relevant ILO website to enable the User to order the publication directly or make further inquiries.
By having quick access to available ILO tools, materials and knowledge base, it is hoped that this database will facilitate the work of ILO staff and ILO Constituents that address poverty and local development from a decent work perspective. This should enhance the conditions for collaboration and coordination of efforts, encouraging people to build on existing work.

The Employment Intensive Investment Programme has developed a database (ASISTDOC) containing over 8,000 documents relating to labour-based technologies and local level planning, produced by the ILO as well as its partners.
Employment-intensive investments link infrastructure development with employment creation, poverty reduction and local economic and social development.

CISDOC is an archived bibliographic database on all aspects of occupational safety and health (OSH) with references for books, reports, journals, legislation, statistics, training materials, etc. Of tens of thousands of references, thousands cite publications that contain statistics on accidents, diseases, fatalities or harmful workplace factors, or discuss methodological issues in OSH statistics. Data may be national, state/provincial, regional or international, and may cover different periods of time, industrial sectors, and population or occuaptional groups. Many countries are represented.